The Post

Sunset Boulevard sweeps the board at Olivier awards

- Louisa Clarence-Smith

A revival of Andrew Lloyd Webber’s Sunset Boulevard swept the board at the Oliviers on Sunday night, winning a joint-record number of awards for a musical.

The West End show, featuring music by Lord Lloyd Webber, 76, was recognised with seven Olivier Awards, putting it on a par with previous winners Hamilton, Matilda and Cabaret.

Singer and former X Factor judge Nicole Scherzinge­r, who plays the leading role, was named best actress in a musical.

Her performanc­e marked her first return to the West End since her debut in Lord Lloyd Webber’s Cats in 2015, for which she received an Olivier nomination.

Scherzinge­r plays Norma Desmond, the silent screen goddess who yearns for a comeback while holed up in an LA mansion, in a revival of a musical first staged in 1993 and inspired by the 1950 Billy Wilder film.

The musical won prizes including best musical revival, best actor in a musical, for Scherzinge­r’s co-star Tom Francis, and best director for Jamie Lloyd, who reimagined the show.

Lloyd-Webber has been a force in the West End for decades, as the composer behind hits including The Phantom of the Opera, School of Rock, and Joseph and the Amazing Technicolo­r Dreamcoat.

Hollywood and TV stars who triumphed at the annual awards for excellence in theatre also include Succession star Sarah Snook, who took home best actress for her performanc­e in The Picture of Dorian Gray. She said it was a “dream come true”.

Snook played 26 characters in the stage adaptation, during which she was followed by a camera crew with her performanc­e beamed onto overhead screens.

She beat competitio­n from actresses including Sarah Jessica Parker, who had received her first Olivier nomination for Plaza Suite, in which she starred opposite her husband Matthew Broderick.

Elsewhere, Mark Gatiss won best actor for The Motive and The Cue, directed by Sam Mendes at the National Theatre. Other nominees for the award had included stars Andrew Scott, James Norton and David Tennant.

Dear England, a production by British playwright James Graham about the England football manager Gareth Southgate, starring Joseph Fiennes, won the Londoner award for the best new play.

It also scored a win for Will Close as best actor in a supporting role, for his performanc­e as Harry Kane.

Speaking to The Telegraph after collecting the Londoner award for best new play, he said: “It’s the one unifying thing that I think we can all acknowledg­e, that if you don’t get people on a lower … income into the theatre, then what the f..k are we doing it for?”

Receiving the award, Graham, 41, paid tribute to the drama teachers at his comprehens­ive school in Nottingham, who he said “just decided that working-class kids should do plays”.

Graham later revealed he had lost his working-class accent at university because he was “so nervous” about it, but said he regrets it now. He said that “hopefully” a play about football could help to open up the theatre to a more diverse audience.

Haydn Gwynne, the actress who died last year after a cancer diagnosis, received a posthumous award. She was best known for her roles in comedy series Drop the Dead Donkey and as Queen Consort Camilla in royal satire The Windsors.

The awards ceremony was first held in 1976, when it was known as the Society of West End Theatre Awards. It is run by the Society of London Theatre (Solt), a not-forprofit membership organisati­on for London theatre producers, managers, owners and operators.

This year’s ceremony was hosted by Hannah Waddingham, the Ted Lasso and musical theatre star, who opened the awards with a performanc­e of Anything Goes from the musical of the same name.

Eleanor Lloyd, president of Solt said: “The Olivier Awards have once again showcased the best of London theatre and the huge talent of this incredible sector. Congratula­tions to all of the worthy winners and every nominee for your immense and valued contributi­on.”

 ?? GETTY ?? At the Oliver Awards Nicole Scherzinge­r won the Best Actress in a Musical award for her role as Norma Desmond in Sunset Boulevard.
GETTY At the Oliver Awards Nicole Scherzinge­r won the Best Actress in a Musical award for her role as Norma Desmond in Sunset Boulevard.

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